Fats Domino is dead. The R&B music legend died on Tuesday at his home in Harvey, La. at the age of 89.

The Jefferson Parish Coroner’s office confirmed his dead on Wednesday, the NY Times reported. The legendary singer died of natural causes so no autopsy will be done on his body. Fats Domino is widely regarded as one of the most commercially successful artists during the Rock & Roll era of the 50s and 60s, second only to Elvis Presley.

Mr. Domino sold over 65 million records during the peak of his career and was such a musical force that Presley once acknowledged him as his predecessor. “A lot of people seem to think I started this business,” Presley told Jet magazine during an interview in 1957. “But rock ’n’ roll was here a long time before I came along. Nobody can sing that music like colored people. Let’s face it: I can’t sing it like Fats Domino can. I know that.”

Among his most recognized hits includes “Ain’t That A Shame,” “Blue Monday,” “Blueberry Hill,” and many more. In 1986 he was indicted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and in 1987 he was given a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. He also became a well respected public figure in his hometown New Orleans and even made several public appearances to raise awareness and funds in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Busy Signal come through for a bad wine from the baddest chicks in the dance.

The Turf boss drop a new track “Busy Signal – Bad Wine (Slap it Up)” produced by his in house producer. Signal has been dishing out new music since last month including a new gangster anthem “Stay So.” “Bad wine gal gi mi a bad win / Gal yo bless so mi affi put yo to the test / Ask yo if yo pu**y fat and yo say yes,” Signal deejay.

Busy has yet to respond to a recent diss from Ding Dong in a new song “Flare.” “Mi no Busy Signal no call Gary,” the Ravers deejay sings. Perhaps Busy Signal is not feeling this beef or maybe Ding Dong is not a big enough artist to war with.

Kalado won’t hang out with any broke foreigners. The dancehall deejay released a short film video for his new viral single “Bruk Foreigner.”

The Xtreme Arts-directed video features the Twin of Twins duo who appeared as the fictitious Ankle Sox and Big Wayne character. The video starts out with Ankle Sox calling Chin Chin who called up Chin Chin who lives in lives in Queens, New York and plays the broke foreigner character.

Kalado says the message he is sending in the video has been misunderstood, “Life hard anywhere you are both yard and abroad but it’s just how some people approach it,” he said in an interview with Winford Williams. In an interview last year, Kalado opened up about his struggles with depression where he again said that he was misunderstood.

“Its just an interview I did and you know how some people can focus only on the bad,” the dancehall star said. “It’s just showing them what channels took you through that depression. In the music thing you know the pressure and the hardship of working but is still in your life different from the musical side.”

[Intro]
What they say, what they say now
What they say, what they say now
What they say, what they say now
What they say, what they say now
Protect Lil B, at all costs, namsayin’

[Verse 1]
Last club, left the bathtub
Like a flash flood baptism
Caps sizzle packs in the van
That’s fizzle as Mac Drizzle
Deal is half pickle
Jammed as bad pistols
The poorly dressed
The correlated, the laureates
No relation unless it’s coronated to coronets
As well, Oswald Cobblepot, Alpo
How so?
Pepperpot love a heartless man in a letter that’s penned to Gwyneth Paltrow
The ends justify the outro
Black hue, Hugh Heffner to the heifers
The boy cow’s a gaucho
L’Oreal, story tales
Rush blush on the rough cuts of the [?]
You are not the cannon fodder, relax
Catch me outside, how ’bout dat
Trust all the Einsteins if you want the facts
Fuck Harvey Weinstein if you want to act
White people having serious brand issues, can’t kiss you
Behind the scenes, fuckin’ us from the back
Got too comfortable with Barack
Now uncle Trump’s making me feel so un-wonderful with the hat
Who watchin’ you by the cap
Make America great again
I just don’t to wait at these great American gates again
Patiently staying in place for 3 hours for a rollercoaster is ridiculous
Well isn’t it?
Protect Lil B and all lowercase betas
To overtake the haters
To motivate the saviors
Yeah, yeah, yeah

[Outro: Lil B]
It’s all love, I don’t promote violence, I’m never with the violence. So I love them and it’s all good, you feel me? I’m still here, I got jumped by like 10 mothafuckas, you know what I’m sayin? Been by myself. It’s all love though, like I said, it’s all love

T-Pain has been dropping new music ahead of the release of his highly anticipated new album OBLiViON, due in November. The singer drops his “Goal Line” video featuring Blac Youngsta a day after performing the single on TRL. The pair hit the poolside with drinks in hand with a bunch of banging females dancing in bikinis. The crew partied from in the all the way into the night.

“You don’t think we’ll catch a case ain’t a / All of my ni**as got GPS all of my ni**as show up at your place ain’t a / I move that weight like I’m weight gaining / I push that weight like I’m weight training,” T-Pain raps. Blac Youngsta has also been on the come-up after signing a deal with Yo Gotti’s label. Earlier this year he got into some legal troubles for his alleged involvement in a drive-by shooting that almost claimed the life of rival rapper Young Dolph in Charlotte, North Carolina. Dolph was sitting inside his SUV when a rain of bullets came down on the vehicle, but fortunately for him, the car was bulletproof.